Clint Ehrlich Profile picture
Jan 21, 2022 29 tweets 9 min read Read on X
The conventional wisdom is that we're headed for a second Cold War with Russia.

I disagree. We're flirting with a hot war.

It could involve nukes. Billions of people could die. 🧵
Just like before the Iraq War, there is a pro-war lobby pushing Biden to attack Russia.

They want to put together a "coalition of the willing."

Russia will be attacked if it does not surrender the territory it acquired in 2014. defenseone.com/ideas/2022/01/…
The call for war is not coming from fringe people in lonely corners of the internet.

That op-ed is from Obama's deputy assistant secretary of defense.

She says that we should, "if necessary, prepare for war" with Russia.
Under what conditions would war be necessary?

If Russia does not end its "illegal occupations" of Ukraine and Georgia.

In other words: Russia must respect our version of international law, or we attack.
The problem is that the territory Russia acquired in 2014 includes Crimea.

The Russia hawks claim that is the problem: because we let Putin have Crimea, now he's demanding more.

They want to "roll back" Russia from that territory, "even at risk of direct combat."
This is a far more aggressive strategy than the U.S. pursued during the Cold War.

America primarily employed a "containment" strategy, as I described in my thread on George Kennan.

It never tried to "roll back" Russia inside the Soviet Union itself.
In this instance, direct combat could easily escalate to all-out nuclear war.

From Russia's perspective, this new "coalition of the willing" would be invading its homeland.

The Kremlin views Crimea as just as much a part of Russia as Moscow.
My summary of the Russian government's attitude towards the territory is not an understatement.

It is informed by my time as a Visiting Researcher at MGIMO, where I had the opportunity to speak to Russian officials and strategists.
Let us assume, for the sake of argument, that war advocates are correct that their anti-Russia coalition would have conventional superiority.

The question is whether Russia would use nuclear weapons to defend its territory.
It is the official policy of the Russian federation that certain conventional attacks deserve a nuclear response.

Specifically, Russia has retained the right to use nuclear weapons against conventional attacks that threaten the existence of the state.
In response to a succesful invasion, Russia could interpret this policy as allowing it to use nuclear weapons to defend Crimea.

The technical legal criterion would arguably be met – and, even if it weren't, the policy could be stretched.
It is useful to consider what the U.S. would do under similar circumstances.

Imagine if Russia invaded Texas and defeated the U.S. military conventionally.

Would we give up our land? Or would we use our most powerful weapons to defeat the hostile occupiers?
There are other scenarios, short of a U.S. attack on Crimea, that could also spark nuclear war.

Russia is already threatening to deploy forces to Venezuela and Cuba.

The goal would be to impose costs on the U.S. comparable to the NATO threat in Ukraine. nationalinterest.org/blog/buzz/russ…
This would effectively be a repeat of the Cuban missile crisis.

Most people have no idea how close we came to global nuclear war during the original crisis.

It was a fluke that the planet wasn't destroyed.

This time we might not be so lucky.
When the Soviet Union deployed missiles to Cuba, America imposed a "quarantine" of the island.

It didn't matter that Moscow was responding to U.S. missile deployments in Turkey and Italy.

The Navy was authorized to attack any Soviet ship that refused to be searched.
Depth charges were dropped on a Soviet submarine, B-59, which was armed with nuclear torpedoes.

The captain and the political officer voted to fire one of those weapons in retaliation.

It is widely agreed that, if this command had been executed, global nuclear war was likely.
The two votes would ordinarily have been enough to launch the attack.

But, by chance, the Soviet flotilla's chief of staff, Vasili Arkhipov, was also onboard B-59.

He voted against launching the nuclear attack. The others listened, and extinction was averted.
To a sane person, this incident shows how close the world came to complete annihalation during the Cold War.

It was pure luck that prevented the conflict from going hot and crossing the nuclear threshold.

If we recreate the same scenario, we may easily get a different result.
On its own, that evidence would be enough to make us take the risk of nuclear war seriously.

But there is an added dimension of urgency due to probability theory and computer models.

They discredit the main argument "debunking" nuclear war.
What is that argument?

It's that, because prior crises with Russia didn't trigger nuclear war, this one won't either.

Here is a typical, obnoxious example of this line of thinking. "We didn't die then, so we'll be safe now."
It neglects the fact that global nuclear war is an existential risk.

A danger that threatens the existence of all humans cannot be evaluated using standard intuitions about probability.

futureoflife.org/background/exi….
Specifically, one has to engage in anthropic reasoning.

What does that mean?

That you have to adjust your probability estimates, based on the limits to what you can observe while alive.
To analyze this puzzle at the level of civilizations, we have to use complex terminology. (e.g., "the Self-Sampling Assumption.")

But we can make the problem intuitive if we describe it at the level of an individual.
Imagine you have a friend who engages in reckless activities.

For fun, he runs across freeways and plays Russian roulette.

He tells you, "I haven't died a single time, so I'm confident I'll be safe."
The problem with this line of reasoning is obvious.

Your crazy friend *can't* observe any instances where his dangerous gambles kill him.

His pool of past experiences is filtered: it's a biased sample, since it excludes death as an outcome.
We are facing the same problem as a species.

Our collective experience excludes scenarios that produce human extinction.

By definition, we never get a "second chance" with them. The first time is the last time. We all die.
Does nuclear war qualify as this kind of risk? Yes.

There was a period in the late 1980s when scientists began to doubt whether it would actually cause human extinction.

It was theorized that nuclear winter might actually be more like "nuclear autumn" – bad, but survivable.
However, the best available computer models now indicate that nuclear winter would be *even worse* than originally estimated.

The sun would be blotted out for years upon years.

Most humans would starve to death.
Given that a nuclear exchange could eliminate our species, the absence of such an experience in our past is not a surprise.

People who invoke the absence of such an exchange to lobby for war with Russia are irresponsible.

Like your crazy friend who plays Russian roulette.

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More from @ClintEhrlich

Dec 7, 2023
Yesterday, Google shocked the world with its new AI, "Gemini."

But it turns out the video was fake: the A.I. *cannot* do what Google showed.

It's my opinion, as a lawyer and computer scientist, that (1) Google lied and (2) it broke the law. 🧵 Image
There are three things that excited people about Google's viral Gemini demo:

1. The AI processed video, not just still images

2. The AI inferred context without being spoon-fed prompts

3. The AI seamlessly spoke and understood conversational audio

None of them are real.
Here's the truth about Gemini:

1. It processes still images, not video.

2. It requires detailed prompting.

3. It communicates best in writing, not audio.

You won't get any of this from the viral video, but it's spelled out in Google's documentation for developers. Image
Read 13 tweets
Sep 14, 2023
UPDATE: I've investigated further, and I've discovered serious problems with the alien mummies.

I believe the best available evidence points to an elaborate hoax.

Here's why I've become suspicious. 1/N 🧵
First, closer review of the scientific testimony presented to Peru's Congress reveals serious contradictions.

One of the major points of conflict is whether embryos were detected inside the alien eggs.

I haven't seen this contradiction discussed before. Image
Prof. Galetskiy was able to identify embryo-like structures inside the eggs.

He expressly started that brain and lung development was visible, equivalent to a human 8 weeks post-conception. Image
Read 11 tweets
Sep 13, 2023
Most people think the alien bodies shown to Mexico's Congress were fake.

But I have the reports from an international team of scientists.

You NEED to read their findings. They all say the aliens are real. 1/N 🧵 Image
The alien specimens we're discussing were found in a mine in Peru.

Radiocarbon dating indicates they are at least 1,000 years old.

But evidence presented to the Congress of Peru goes much further than that. Image
Sophisticated DNA testing was performed on the alien specimens by an international consortium.

The results were presented by geneticist Salvador Angel Romero, who was trained at UNAM – Mexico's equivalent of MIT. Image
Read 32 tweets
Sep 12, 2023
Let's honor the victims of 9/11 by telling the truth:

We were attacked by a terrorist organization that was WORKING FOR the U.S. government.

The proof is available online for anyone brave enough to read it. 1/N 🧵 Image
People want to believe that the DoD and CIA stopped supporting Bin Laden in the 1980s.

That simply isn't true.

Al Qaeda's #2 leader, Ayman al-Zawahiri, was working for the U.S. government *in 2001.* Image
It was part of an operation called Gladio B.

The original Operation Gladio recruited fascists to fight communism inside Europe.

Its successor, Gladio B, recruited Islamists to fight Russia in Central Asia. Image
Read 16 tweets
Aug 3, 2023
🚨 BOOM: David Grusch may have seen proof of an extra-terrestrial mothership commanding a tic-tac UAP.

It sounds crazy, but it's spelled out in declassified documents.

Buckle up.🧵1/N Image
In 2021, it appears Mr. Grusch was the Acting Chief of the Operations Center for the National Reconnaissance Office (NRO).

He led a team of 30, and he was responsible for the President's Daily Brief.

Any intel at NRO went through Mr. Grusch.
Image
Image
It's important to understand that NRO has the largest budget of any intelligence agency.

It has more resources than the NSA. More than the CIA.

It's the agency that creates and controls U.S. spy satellites and other top-secret sensor platforms. Image
Read 18 tweets
Aug 2, 2023
People think we can ignore evidence of UFOs, because the probability of aliens visiting Earth is low.

There's a giant hole in their reasoning!

I can prove it using probability theory, and I can show you how to explain the problem to others. 1/N 🧵 Image
Skeptics often tell you they are 99% sure aliens have not arrived on Earth.

In their mind, those are the same odds as reaching into a jar with 100 stones – 99 gray, 1 black – and randomly pulling out the only black stone.

But there's actually a HUGE difference! Image
We can believe that two things are both 1% probable, while being *more confident* in one of those estimates than the other.

In Bayesian probability theory, we call this the "strength" of the "prior."

("Prior" just means how confident we are "prior" to seeing new evidence.)
Read 11 tweets

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